On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 7:34 AM, Jeremy Finzel <finz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> We want to enforce a policy, partly just to protect those who might > forget, for every table in a particular schema to have a primary key. This > can't be done with event triggers as far as I can see, because it is quite > legitimate to do: > > BEGIN; > CREATE TABLE foo (id int); > ALTER TABLE foo ADD PRIMARY KEY (id); > COMMIT; > > It would be nice to have some kind of "deferrable event trigger" or some > way to enforce that no transaction commits which added a table without a > primary key. > > Any ideas? > > Thanks, > Jeremy > ​What stops somebody from doing: CREATE TABLE foo (filler text primary key default null, realcol1 int, realcol2 text); And then just never bother to ever insert anything into the column FILLER? It fulfills your stated requirement​ of every table having a primary key. Of course, you could amend the policy to say a "non-NULL primary key". -- I have a theory that it's impossible to prove anything, but I can't prove it. Maranatha! <>< John McKown